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CC$1$ - traduction vers Anglais

1927 LEXINGTON-CLASS AIRCRAFT CARRIER OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY
USS Lexington (CC-1); Lady Lex; CC-1; USS Lexington (CV2); USS Lexington (CV 2)
  • 
View of the flight deck of ''Lexington'', at about 15:00 on 8 May. The ship's air group is spotted aft, with Wildcat fighters nearest the camera. Dauntless dive bombers and Devastator torpedo bombers are parked further aft. Smoke is rising around the aft aircraft elevator from fires burning in the hangar.
  • Confirmed direct hits sustained by ''Lexington'' during the battle
  • [[Curtiss F6C]] fighters and [[Martin T3M]] torpedo bombers, 1928
  • A [[Mitsubishi G4M]] torpedo bomber photographed from ''Lexington''{{'}}s flight deck on 20 February 1942
  • 2}} in 1929
  • ''Lexington'' in the early morning of 8 May 1942, prior to launching her aircraft during the [[Battle of the Coral Sea]]
  • ''Lexington'' firing her eight-inch guns, 1928
  • ''Lexington''{{'}}s ship's insignia was adapted from the sculpture by [[Henry Hudson Kitson]]
  • ''Lexington'' launching [[Martin T4M]] torpedo bombers in 1931
  • ''Lexington'' on the slipway, 1925
  • ''Lexington'' in a smoke screen off Panama, February 1929
  • Quincy]] to [[Boston Navy Yard]] in January 1928
  • ''Lexington'', abandoned and burning, several hours after being damaged by Japanese airstrikes
  • ''Lexington'' photographed from a Japanese aircraft on 8 May after she had already been struck by bombs

CC      
running account

Définition

cc
1.
You use cc when referring to the volume or capacity of something such as the size of a car engine. cc is an abbreviation for 'cubic centimetres'.
...1,500 cc sports cars.
2.
cc is used at the end of a business letter to indicate that a copy is being sent to another person. (BUSINESS)
...cc J. Chater, S. Cooper.

Wikipédia

USS Lexington (CV-2)

USS Lexington (CV-2), nicknamed "Lady Lex", was the name ship of her class of two aircraft carriers built for the United States Navy during the 1920s. Originally designed as a battlecruiser, she was converted into one of the Navy's first aircraft carriers during construction to comply with the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922, which essentially terminated all new battleship and battlecruiser construction. The ship entered service in 1928 and was assigned to the Pacific Fleet for her entire career. Lexington and her sister ship, Saratoga, were used to develop and refine carrier tactics in a series of annual exercises before World War II. On more than one occasion these included successfully staged surprise attacks on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The ship's turbo-electric propulsion system allowed her to supplement the electrical supply of Tacoma, Washington, during a drought in late 1929 to early 1930. She also delivered medical personnel and relief supplies to Managua, Nicaragua, after an earthquake in 1931.

Lexington was at sea when the Pacific War began on 7 December 1941, ferrying fighter aircraft to Midway Island. Her mission was cancelled and she returned to Pearl Harbor a week later. After a few days, she was sent to create a diversion from the force en route to relieve the besieged Wake Island garrison by attacking Japanese installations in the Marshall Islands. The island surrendered before the relief force got close enough, and the mission was cancelled. A planned attack on Wake Island in January 1942 had to be cancelled when a submarine sank the oiler required to supply the fuel for the return trip. Lexington was sent to the Coral Sea the following month to block any Japanese advances into the area. The ship was spotted by Japanese search aircraft while approaching Rabaul, New Britain, but her aircraft shot down most of the Japanese bombers that attacked her. Together with the carrier Yorktown, she successfully attacked Japanese shipping off the east coast of New Guinea in early March.

Lexington was quickly refitted in Pearl Harbor at the end of the month and rendezvoused with Yorktown in the Coral Sea in early May. A few days later the Japanese began Operation Mo, the invasion of Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea, and the two American carriers attempted to stop the invasion forces. They sank the light aircraft carrier Shōhō on 7 May during the Battle of the Coral Sea, but did not encounter the main Japanese force of the carriers Shōkaku and Zuikaku until the next day. Aircraft from Lexington and Yorktown badly damaged Shōkaku, but the Japanese aircraft crippled Lexington. A mixture of air and aviation gasoline in her improperly drained aircraft fueling trunk lines (which ran from the keel tanks to her hangar deck) ignited, causing a series of explosions and fires that could not be controlled. Lexington was scuttled by an American destroyer during the evening of 8 May to prevent her capture. The ship's wreck was located on 4 March 2018 by R/V Petrel, which was part of an expedition funded by Paul Allen.